Congresshills Apartments v. Ypsilanti Township

341 N.W.2d 121, 128 Mich. App. 279, 1983 Mich. App. LEXIS 3228
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 1983
DocketDocket 64670
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 341 N.W.2d 121 (Congresshills Apartments v. Ypsilanti Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Congresshills Apartments v. Ypsilanti Township, 341 N.W.2d 121, 128 Mich. App. 279, 1983 Mich. App. LEXIS 3228 (Mich. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

After Remand

Before: Bronson, P.J., and Mackenzie and J. H. Gillis, JJ.

Per Curiam.

Petitioner taxpayer appeals from a decision of the Michigan Tax Tribunal, which was entered after reversal and remand by this Court, Congresshills Apartments v Ypsilanti Twp, 102 Mich App. 668; 302 NW2d 274 (1981). In the present appeal, as in Congresshills, supra, the issue before this Court is whether the Tax Tribunal properly computed the true cash value of petitioner’s property for purposes of assessing taxes for the years 1977-1979. Once more, we reverse the Tax Tribunal’s computation of true cash value.

At the original hearing, before the remand in *282 Congresshills, supra, the tribunal agreed with the parties that the proper method of determining true cash value was by capitalization of income. The tribunal adopted the capitalization rates advocated by petitioner, 13.68% for 1977; 13.6345% for 1978; and 13.9495% for 1979. None of these rates were the subject of any dispute in the appeal from those original proceedings, Congresshills, supra. The tribunal applied those rates to certain hypothetical market rental income figures advocated by the respondent township’s appraiser. This Court reversed, finding that the tribunal committed an error of law in using hypothetical rental rates which petitioner could not legally obtain as a low-income subsidized project. Congresshills, supra, p 677. The Court remanded for the purpose of recalculating true cash value based upon actual rather than hypothetical rental income.

On remand, consistent with this Court’s opinion in Congresshills, supra, the Tax Tribunal used actual income and expenses in arriving at its assessment of true cash value. The tribunal’s aggregate net operating income figure for the period in question was 55% less than before this Court’s order of remand. Nonetheless, its determination of true cash value on remand was almost identical to that which it made before remand. The tribunal reached this result by using drastically reduced capitalization rates, 6.24% for 1977; 6.1895% for 1978; and 6.201% for 1979. For reasons both substantive and procedural, we believe that the tribunal’s use of these reduced capitalization rates was erroneous as a matter of law.

First, we believe that the use of the reduced capitalization rates was substantively erroneous, in that those rates impermissibly incorporate the value of the federal interest subsidy as a real *283 estate value. Although the tribunal’s opinion did not state that its purpose was to tax this interest subsidy, there can be little doubt that this was the tribunal’s intention. At least one of the tribunal judges stated on the record that "this tribunal * * * is * * * of the opinion that somehow the subsidy figures into the value of [the] parcel”. However, the interest subsidy is an intangible asset or benefit which cannot properly be subject to taxation as "real” or "tangible” property under Const 1963, art 9, § 3. The statute authorizing ad valorem taxation of "real property”, MCL 211.2; MSA 7.2, defines such property narrowly to include only "lands within the state, and all buildings and fixtures thereon, and appurtenances thereto” and contains no language which would permit taxation of an intangible benefit or asset such as an interest subsidy. Compare also the definition of "tangible property” contained in Black’s Law Dictionary (4th ed), p 1267, defining such property as being "necessarily corporeal” in nature. To define an interest subsidy as a tangible asset or real property subject to taxation would be to extend Michigan’s property tax laws by implication, a practice condemned in Continental Motors Corp v Muskegon Twp, 365 Mich 191; 112 NW2d 429 (1961); see also General Motors Corp v Detroit, 372 Mich 234; 126 NW2d 108 (1964).

Petitioner also demonstrates that the tribunal’s method of deriving capitalization rates disregards the actual amount of the required debt service for petitioner’s property, while erroneously projecting a positive return on petitioner’s equity. Specifically, petitioner points out that the tribunal’s capitalization rates are based upon an assumed return of six percent on the petitioner’s equity of ten percent of the value of the project — a figure *284 based upon the maximum permissible return on equity for such projects under applicable federal regulations — rather than on petitioner’s actual return. Petitioner goes on to point out that it has never experienced the distribution projected by the tribunal but that it has instead run a substantial annual deficit. 1 Petitioner notes the crucial factor underlying this disparity: the principal amount of the mortgage, $4,767,300, is clearly far greater than the market value of the development, a circumstance which is common in federally subsidized low-income housing developments. See Community Development Co of Gardner v Board of Assessors of Gardner, 377 Mass 351; 385 NE2d 1376 (1979), where the Court observed:

"The great dilemma in assessing federally assisted housing projects is that the 'value’ of these projects is inherently ambiguous. Construction costs are known; but these overstate the market value of the project, since in the absence of subsidy the rental stream produced by the property would not justify the actual expenditure on construction.” 385 NE2d 1378.

Accord, First Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n v *285 Flint, 415 Mich 702; 329 NW2d 755 (1982), where our own Supreme Court cited government-subsidized construction as an example of property with a taxable market value less than its cost:

"Governments * * * for reasons of policy * * * build * * * private housing in neighborhoods where private entrepreneurs will not build, which [projects] are worth less on the market than they cost to construct.” 415 Mich 705, fn 4.
"If the government were to sell an overimprovement to a private person, market price rather than the cost of construction would govern for ad valorem tax purposes. If the government subsidizes a private enterprise in constructing such structures, the market value rather than cost would govern.” 415 Mich 706, fn 5.

In the present case, petitioner’s project is clearly one which falls within the category of those described by the Courts in Community Development Co, supra, and First Federal Savings, supra. Yet the Tax Tribunal’s cash value determination on remand differs remarkably little from that which it reached in the original proceedings, when it expressly disregarded the project’s governmental purpose and governmentally imposed rental income limitations. In short, by treating the interest subsidy as a taxable element of value comparable to the rental income of an unregulated commercial enterprise, the tribunal has completely overlooked the governmental purpose underlying petitioner’s project and has in the process imposed a tax upon an intangible benefit, contrary to Const 1963, art 9, §3.

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Bluebook (online)
341 N.W.2d 121, 128 Mich. App. 279, 1983 Mich. App. LEXIS 3228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/congresshills-apartments-v-ypsilanti-township-michctapp-1983.